With a win by Heidi Ganahl, Republicans will maintain a one-vote majority on the University of Colorado’s Board of Regents.

Ganahl won the race for the at-large seat on the board with 52 percent of the vote to Democrat Alice Madden’s 48 percent, according to the Secretary of State’s Office.

The race was decided by a statewide vote. Though Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton won Colorado with 47 percent of the vote to Republican Donald Trump’s 45 percent, the regents race told a different story.

Ganahl, who founded the successful pet-care franchise Camp Bow Wow and the nonprofit Moms Fight Back, chalked her win up to a “crazy political environment” and the hard work of her supporters.

There are nine seats on CU’s Board of Regents — seven for each of Colorado’s congressional districts and two at-large seats. Ganahl and Madden were vying for the at-large seat being vacated by Republican Steve Bosley, who is term-limited.

A Madden victory would have given Democrats a majority on the board for the first time since 1979. Republicans will maintain control with a one-vote majority.

Opponents of a Lakewood ballot measure to limit new home construction in Colorado's fifth-largest city raised 38 times more in campaign contributions than backers of Question 200 -- $573,686 versus $15,071.

City leaders in Lakewood grappled Monday with the gritty details of putting into place an annual housing cap that voters in the city recently passed as part of an effort to slow the metro area's explosive growth in one of its largest suburbs.